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Transcript
Who Needs Geology?
Geology in Today’s World
• Geology - The scientific study of the Earth
– Physical Geology is the study of Earth’s materials, changes
of the surface and interior of the Earth, and the forces
that cause those changes
– Historical Geology is the of the origin
• Practical Aspects of Geology
– Natural resources
– Geological hazards
– Environmental protection
2
Practical Aspects of Geology
• Natural Resources
– All manufactured objects
depend on Earth’s resources
– Localized concentrations of
useful geological resources
are mined or extracted
– If it can’t be grown, it must
be mined
– Most resources are limited in
quantity and non-renewable
3
Resource Extraction and
Environmental Protection
• Coal Mining
– Careless mining can release acids
into groundwater
• Petroleum Resources
– Removal, transportation and waste
disposal can damage the
environment
Alaska pipeline
• Dwindling resources can encourage disregard for
ecological damage caused by extraction activities
4
Geologic Hazards
• Earthquakes
– Shaking can damage buildings and
break utility lines (electric, gas,
water, sewer)
• Volcanoes
– Ash flows and mudflows can
overwhelm populated areas
• Landslides, floods, and wave erosion
5
Physical Geology Concepts
•
Earth’s Systems
–
Atmosphere
•
–
Hydrosphere
•
–
water on or near the Earth’s surface
Biosphere
•
–
the gases that envelop the Earth
all living or once-living materials
Geosphere
•
the solid rocky Earth
6
Physical Geology Concepts
• Earth’s Heat Engines
– External (energy from the Sun)
• Primary driver of atmospheric (weather) and
hydrospheric circulation
• Controls weathering of rocks at Earth’s surface
– Internal (heat moving from hot interior to
cooler exterior)
• Primary driver of most geospheric phenomena
(volcanism, magmatism, tectonism)
7
Earth’s Interior
• Compositional Layers
– Crust (~3-70 km thick)
• Very thin outer rocky shell of Earth
– Continental crust - thicker and less dense
– Oceanic crust - thinner and more dense
– Mantle (~2900 km thick)
• Hot solid that flows slowly over time;
Fe-, Mg-, Si-rich minerals
– Core (~3400 km radius)
• Outer core - metallic liquid;
mostly iron
• Inner core - metallic solid; mostly iron
8
Earth’s Interior
• Mechanical Layers
– Lithosphere (~100 km thick)
• Rigid/brittle outer shell of Earth
• Composed of both crust and
uppermost mantle
• Makes up Earth’s tectonic “plates”
– Asthenosphere
• Plastic (capable of flow) zone on
which the lithosphere “floats”
9
Theory of Plate Tectonics
• Continental Drift Hypothesis
– Originally proposed in early 20th century to
explain the “fit of continents”, common rock
types and fossils across ocean basins, etc.
– Insufficient evidence found for driving
mechanism; hypothesis initially rejected
• Plate Tectonics Theory
– Originally proposed in the late 1960s
– Included new understanding of the seafloor
and explanation of driving force
– Describes lithosphere as being broken into
plates that are in motion
– Explains origin and locations of such things as
volcanoes, fault zones and mountain belts
10
Tectonic Plate Boundaries
• Divergent boundaries
– Plates move apart
– Magma rises, cools and forms new lithosphere
– Typically expressed as mid-oceanic ridges
• Transform boundaries
– Plates slide past one another
– Fault zones and earthquakes mark boundary
– San Andreas fault in California
• Convergent boundaries
– Plates move toward each other
– Mountain belts and volcanoes common
– Oceanic plates may sink into mantle along a subduction
zone, typically marked by a deep ocean trench
11
Geologic Time
• “Deep” Time
– Most geologic processes occur gradually over millions of years
– Changes typically imperceptible over the span of a human lifetime
– Current best estimate for age of Earth is ~4.55 billion years
• Geologic Time and the History of Life
– Complex life forms became abundant ~544 million years ago
– Reptiles became abundant ~230 million years ago
– Dinosaurs became extinct (along with many other organisms)
~65 million years ago
– Humans have been around for only ~ 3 million years
• “Nothing hurries geology”
Mark Twain
12
Geologic time
• Geologists are now able to assign fairly
accurate dates to events in Earth history
• Relative dating and the geologic time scale
• Relative dating means that dates are placed in
their proper sequence or order without
knowing their age in years
Geologic time
• The magnitude of geologic time
• Involves vast times – millions or billions of
years
• An appreciation for the magnitude of geologic
time is important because many processes are
very gradual
The
Geologic
Time
Scale
Figure 1.4